Difference between revisions of "Case of personal pronouns in Norwegian"
Lars Hellan  (Talk | contribs)  (Created page with 'The only remnant of a case system in Norwegian is found in personal pronouns, where most pronouns have two forms, one for use as a ''subject'', and one for all other uses.')  | 
				Lars Hellan  (Talk | contribs)   | 
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The only remnant of a case system in Norwegian is found in personal pronouns, where most pronouns have two forms, one for use as a ''subject'', and one for all other uses.  | The only remnant of a case system in Norwegian is found in personal pronouns, where most pronouns have two forms, one for use as a ''subject'', and one for all other uses.  | ||
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| + | Error example:    | ||
| + |            ''“Du liker jeg.”''  | ||
| + | Error message for this string:  | ||
| + |            ''The word "jeg" is marked with the wrong case, try using "meg" instead.''  | ||
Revision as of 22:25, 25 June 2011
The only remnant of a case system in Norwegian is found in personal pronouns, where most pronouns have two forms, one for use as a subject, and one for all other uses.
Error example:  
“Du liker jeg.”
Error message for this string:
The word "jeg" is marked with the wrong case, try using "meg" instead.